MADISON, WIS. – Scott C. Blader, United States Attorney for
the Western District of Wisconsin, announced that today Bryan Rogers, 32,
Madison, Wisconsin, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge William M. Conley to
135 months in federal prison for transporting a minor from Tennessee to
Wisconsin for an illegal sexual purpose.
This prison term will be followed by 15 years of supervised
release. Rogers pleaded guilty to this
offense on June 19, 2019.
Rogers came into contact with the minor in Tennessee through
an online game. She told him that she
was being sexually assaulted by an adult on a daily basis. Rogers persuaded the minor to make a video
recording of an assault and send it to him, allegedly so he could provide
evidence to law enforcement of the sexual assaults. The minor did not want to produce the video,
but eventually acquiesced after Rogers said he would come rescue her after she
made the video.
After the minor sent the video of her abuse to Rogers, he
then traveled to Tennessee and returned to Wisconsin with the minor. The minor was reported missing on January 14,
2019. Subsequent investigation led to Rogers, and he was questioned on January
31, 2019. When questioned by law
enforcement, he admitted he had been in contact with the victim online and that
she had disclosed her sexual assault, but claimed he never met her in person,
he did not go to Tennessee to get her, and he did not know her
whereabouts. During a search of his
home, officers found the victim in a closet.
The victim told investigators Rogers had picked her up in Tennessee and
brought her to Wisconsin, where he engaged in sexual intercourse with her. The victim stated that during her two weeks
in Wisconsin, she hid in Rogers’ closet or in the trunk of his car while he was
at work.
“The actions of this defendant are abhorrent. Instead of
immediately contacting law enforcement, Rogers encouraged the child victim to
produce a video of the sexual abuse, and after claiming to rescue her, he
himself sexually assaulted her,” said U.S. Attorney Blader. “My office is committed to working with our
federal, state, and local law enforcement partners to bring interstate child
predators to justice.”
Judge Conley noted that Rogers targeted an extremely
vulnerable victim and could have been a hero in this case by reporting the victim’s
abuse to authorities; instead Rogers did not help her and further victimized
her.
The charge against Rogers is the result of an investigation
by the Wisconsin Department of Justice Division of Criminal Investigation,
Federal Bureau of Investigation, Madison Police Department, Dane County
Sheriff’s Office, and Monroe County (Tennessee) Sheriff’s Office. The prosecution of this case is being handled
by Assistant U.S. Attorney Julie Pfluger.
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